An Chong Tang 安衝湯 - Calm the Penetrating Channel
For Qi and Yin Deficiency Heat
AN CHONG TANG Uses
- Nourishes the Blood
- Tonifies Qi
- Stops bleeding
-
Qi and Yin Deficiency Heat
Indications for Use
Excessive Menstrual Bleeding
AN CHONG TANG Formula Ingredients
Pharmaceutical Latin
|
Pin Yin
|
%
|
White Atractylodes | Bai Zhu | 15 |
Astragalus Root | Huang Qi | 15 |
Fossilized Mammoth Bone | Long Gu | 20 |
Oyster Shell | Mu Li | 20 |
Raw foxglove Root | Sheng Di Huang | 10 |
White Peony Root | Bai Shao | 5 |
Cuttlefish Bone | Hai Piao Xiao | 5 |
Madder Root | Qian Cao Gen | 5 |
Japanese Teasel Root | Xu Duan | 5 |
AN CHONG TANG Dosage
Granules: 2-4 grams, taken 2-3 times a day, best on an empty stomach
Whole Herbs: Using a container made of ceramic, glass, or stainless steel (no aluminum, iron or copper) boil 1 packet of herbs in 2-quarts of water or until 2 cups of medicine remain. Hai Piao Xiao, Mu Li, and Long Gu should be pre-boiled for 30-60 minutes
Strain herbs; save and refrigerate for a second boiling. Drink 1 cup in the AM. And 1 cup in the PM. If desired, repeat the following day, using the saved herbs from the refrigerator.
* What’s the Difference Between, PIAN, WAN, TANG, SAN, SHUI and GAO?
- PIAN = Tablet (modern looking pill)
- WAN = Pill (old-style or handmade pill, or black teapill)
- TANG = Water Decoction (boiled whole herbs)
- SAN = Powder (milled or granulated)
- SHUI = Tincture (extract with alcohol or other solvent)
- GAO = Paste (topical unguent or plaster)
Information is for educational purposes and is not meant to substitute for the advice of your health care provider. These statements have not been evaluated by the US Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease
*These statements have not been evaluated by the US Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
This product cannot be returned, refunded, or exchanged.